Vestories

In our last piece in this series, “The Weight of Evidence,” we introduced three key stock market factors (equity, value and small-cap) plus a couple more for bonds (term and credit) that have formed a backbone for evidence-based portfolio construction.

Continued inquiry has found additional market factors at play, with additional potential premiums (which also seem to result from accepting added market risk, avoiding ill-advised investor behaviors or both). In academic circles, the most prominent among these are profitability and momentum:

The Momentum Factor – Stocks that have done well or poorly in the recent past tend to continue to do the same for longer than random chance seems to explain.

A Closer Look at Newer Factors

Before we get ahead of ourselves, let’s discuss a few caveats.

Wet Paint Warning – While these “new” factors may or may not have existed for some time, our ability to isolate them is more recent. As the ink still dries on the research papers, some among the evidence-based community are still assessing their staying power.

Cost versus Reward – Just because a factor exists in theory, doesn’t mean it can be implemented in real life. We must be able to capture an expected premium without generating costs beyond its worth.

Dueling Factors – Sometimes, it can be difficult to build one factor into a portfolio without sacrificing another. For example, as Jared Kizer explains in his Multifactor World blog post, “One generally can’t tilt toward both value and momentum at the same time, because the two strategies tend to be highly negatively correlated.” Benefits and tradeoffs must be carefully considered at the fund level as well as for your individual goals.

As a result, opinions vary on when, how or even if profitability, momentum and other newer factors should play a role in current portfolio construction. We would be happy to speak with you individually about our evolving approach. To help you assess whether they may make sense for you, let’s explore how to think about investment information.

Investment Information: A Double-Edged Sword

As time marches on, relentless questioning from scholars and practitioners alike has been essential to evidence-based investment theory and application, dispelling illusions and laying the foundation for the insights we now routinely harness.

Similar inquiry must continue to pave the way to future improvements. But one need only glance at daily headlines to notice a never-ending stream of ideas from competing, often conflicting voices of authority. While being informed is helpful, being overloaded by it can do as much harm as good to well-intended investors. Even when the news is solid (which is never a given), hyperactive reaction can strip away all the advantages of an enlightened investment approach.

Investment Reality: Choose Your Allies Carefully

So, how do you know what to heed and who to ignore? This is where we believe an evidence-based advisor relationship is critical to your wealth and your well-being. Calls to action that erupt overnight based on scant evidence and concentrated events are unlikely candidates for building into a durable investment discipline. As we outlined in, “The Weight of Evidence,” whenever we assess the validity of existing and emerging market insights, we ask pointed questions that can take years to resolve:

Have the results been replicated across factors, over time and around the world?

Is there robust analysis, not only from industry insiders but from disinterested academics?

Has it survived extensive peer review, if not unscathed, at least free of mortal wounds?

The Bottom Line

By considering each new potential factor according to strict guidelines, our aim is to extract the diamonds of promising new evidence-based insights from the considerably larger piles of misleading misinformation. We feel you are best served by heeding those who take a similar approach with their advice. Next, we turn to a factor we have mentioned but have yet to explore, even though it may be the most influential one of all: you and your financial behaviors.